
Yoshinari Asami
Director, Mathematics Instructor
Graduate of Kobe University Faculty of Science. Taught in Japan's "1000 Engineers" project and has over 12 years of teaching experience in Mongolia.
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Guided by this principle, we support every student with honest, dedicated care.
Backed by our Tokyo headquarters with 23+ years of experience and capacity for 880+ students. After arriving in Japan, Mongolian students continue to receive full EJU preparation, materials, and guidance.
A dedicated faculty that systematically prepares students for target EJU scores through carefully designed programs.

Director, Mathematics Instructor
Graduate of Kobe University Faculty of Science. Taught in Japan's "1000 Engineers" project and has over 12 years of teaching experience in Mongolia.

Physics & Chemistry Instructor
Graduate of Kyoto Institute of Technology. Scored a perfect 100 on the EJU Physics exam. Holds Japanese N1 certification.

Japanese Language Instructor
Experienced instructor who teaches systematically through a detailed curriculum designed to help students reach their target scores.
Mongolian staff stay in close contact before and after students arrive in Japan, offering emotional and daily-life guidance so parents can feel at ease.
We recommend only safe, reliable, high-quality universities that secure students' futures.
Our dormitory in Tokyo's Katsushika ward costs only 35,000 yen per month (among the lowest in Tokyo). Five minutes from school and fully furnished — significant savings.

President & CEO, JOTO EDUCATION CENTER LLC
Since our establishment in August 2018, JOTO EDUCATION CENTER LLC has been operating in Ulaanbaatar, the capital of Mongolia, with the firm belief that a commitment to public interest and persistent, dedicated efforts will undoubtedly create a valuable future. Mongolia is a country with tremendous potential for further development, as exemplified by its abundant mineral resources. Through my more than ten years of working with Mongolian students in the field of education, I have been repeatedly amazed by their high potential. With the sole desire to help open the doors of possibility for these people who will carry Mongolia's future, I have been working to support their studies in Japan.
As a Japanese person, I deeply admire and respect the noble character of traditional Japanese people, who are strict with themselves and gentle with others, strong yet kind. I believe that when Mongolia's talented young people study and work in Japan, and the Mongolian virtues of "initiative and courage" harmonize beautifully with the Japanese virtues of "sincerity and consideration for others" within them, outstanding individuals with admirable character who can be proud on the world stage will emerge. I firmly believe that when such talented people cooperate with each other for higher public purposes, wonderful teams and communities can be formed that will have a positive impact not only on Mongolia but also on Asia and the world as a whole. I hope that our daily small activities will help create such a unique and exemplary community.